The conversion of natural saltmarshes to shrimp aquaculture ponds can potentially influence the biogeochemical cycling of nutrients in coastal wetlands, but its impact on the dynamics of sediment dissimilatory nitrate… Click to show full abstract
The conversion of natural saltmarshes to shrimp aquaculture ponds can potentially influence the biogeochemical cycling of nutrients in coastal wetlands, but its impact on the dynamics of sediment dissimilatory nitrate (NO3-) reduction remains poorly understood. In this study, three sediment NO3- reduction processes including denitrification (DNF), anaerobic ammonium oxidation (ANAMMOX), and dissimilatory NO3- reduction to ammonium (DNRA) were examined simultaneously in a natural saltmarsh and two shrimp culture ponds (5- and 18-year-old) in July and November, using nitrogen (N) isotope-tracing experiments. Our results showed that sediment potential DNF, ANAMMOX and DNRA rates were generally higher in the shrimp culture ponds than the natural saltmarsh in the two seasons. The rates of all three processes generally increased with the age of shrimp ponds, with the magnitude of increase being less pronounced for DNF and ANAMMOX than DNRA. The contribution of DNRA to total NO3- reduction increased significantly following saltmarsh conversion to shrimp ponds, suggesting that DNRA became an increasingly important biogeochemical process under shrimp culture. DNRA competed with DNF and limited reactive N loss to some extent after natural saltmarshes converted to shrimp culture ponds. The results of redundancy analysis revealed that the availability of substrates and sulfides in sediments, rather than the bacteria gene abundance, were the most important factor influencing the NO3- reduction processes. Overall, our findings highlighted that shrimp-aquaculture reclamation may aggravate nitrogen loading in coastal wetlands by promoting the production of bioavailable ammonium.
               
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